Strathglass is a strath or wide and shallow valley in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland down which runs the meandering River Glass from the point at which it starts at the confluence of the River Affric and Abhainn Deabhag to the point where, on joining with the River Farrar at Struy, the combined waters become the River Beauly.
The A831 road runs southwest from the vicinity of Erchless Castle up the length of Strathglass and serves the village of Cannich which is the largest settlement within the valley. The road then runs east from here via Glen Urquhart to Drumnadrochit beside Loch Ness. A minor road continues southwest up the valley from Cannich towards Glen Affric.[1] Strathglass was also followed by a line of electricity pylons but that has been replaced by a line of new pylons across Eskdale Moor to the east of the strath. Both flanks of the valley are heavily wooded; on the higher ground to the northwest, beyond the forests are the moors of Struy Forest and Balmore Forest.
History
Strathglass has been carved out by water and glacial action along the line of the Strathglass Fault through Loch Eil Group psammites of the Loch Ness Supergroup. The northeast–southwest aligned fault is a Caledonoid tectonic feature. The floor of the valley is formed from alluvium deposited by the river, backed by remnant river terraces in places.[2]
Beginning on 27 May 1700, underground Catholic Bishop Thomas Nicolson had visited Strathglass. In his later Report, the Bishop had described the region, unlike the Hebrides, as so abundant with trees that the local population lived in wattle and daub houses instead of dry stone and thatch crofts. The Bishop explained, "They are called Criel Houses, because the larger timbers are interlaced with wickerwork in the same way baskets are made. They are covered outside with sods, or divots. All of the houses on the mainland, wherever we went, are built in this fashion, except those of the lairds and principal gentry. Strathglass is partly inhabited by Frasers, whose chief is Lord Lovat, and partly by Chisholms under the Laird of Strathglass. These latter are all Catholics."[3]
According to Odo Blundell, "When writing of Strathglass on a previous occasion, I mentioned that, 'from the Reformation to the beginning of the [19th-]century, the Catholics in the Aird and in Strathglass received no more support from the two chief families of the neighbourhood, namely, the Frasers and the Chisholms, than was to be expected from the heads of clans who looked upon all their clansmen, whatever might be their religion, as members of their own family."[4]
Local residents
- John Farquharson (Scottish Gaelic: Maighstir Iain,[5] an-tAthair Iain Mac Fhearchair) (1699–1782), was a nobleman from Clan Farquharson, an outlawed Jesuit priest based from a cave at Glen Cannich, and popular folk hero in the Scottish folklore of Lochaber and Strathglass.
- Fr. Alexander Cameron (Scottish Gaelic: Maighstir Sandaidh, an t-Athair Alasdair Camshròn) (1701 – 19 October 1746) a nobleman from Clan Cameron and a Roman Catholic priest. Prior to the Uprising of 1745, Fr. Cameron ran a highly successful apostolate for the still illegal and underground Catholic Church in Scotland in both Lochaber and Strathglass. After the Battle of Culloden in 1746, Fr. Cameron was captured by the British Army and later died aboard a prison hulk anchored in the Thames River. He is currently being promoted by the Knights of St Columba for Canonization by the Roman Catholic Church.
- Aeneas Chisholm (1759–1818), a Roman Catholic priest and bishop who served as Vicar Apostolic of the Highland District.
- Catriona Nic Fhearghais, war poet and wife of a Clan Chisholm Tacksman, William Chisholm of Strathglass. Catriona composed one of the most iconic verse laments in Scottish Gaelic literature after her husband fell fighting with the Jacobite Army at the Battle of Culloden in 1746.
- Rt.-Rev. William Fraser (c. 1779–1851), first Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Halifax and then the first Bishop of the Diocese of Arichat. Folk hero in both Scottish and Canadian folklore.
References
- ^ Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 scale Explorer map sheet 431 Glen Urquhart and Strathglass
- ^ http://www.largeimages.bgs.ac.uk/iip/mapsportal.html?id=1002467 BGS 1:50,000 sheet Scotland sheet 83W Strathconon Solid & Drift Geology
- ^ Odo Blundell (1917), The Catholic Highlands of Scotland, Volume II, pp. 124-125.
- ^ Odo Blundell (1909), The Catholic Highlands of Scotland, Volume I, London, p. 191.
- ^ Christianity in Strathglass, From the Website for St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church, Beauly.